PRJ566 Project Planning & Management Work Breakdown Structure.

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Presentation transcript:

PRJ566 Project Planning & Management Work Breakdown Structure

Agenda  Work Breakdown Structure—What is it?  Defining Summary Tasks  Defining Tasks  More Examples

Work Breakdown Structure  It is a hierarchical description of the work that must be done to complete the project  It defines all of the activities that must be carried out in order for you to complete the project  Each activity has a number of tasks needed to be done in order to complete it

Work Breakdown Structure  Activity: an item of work needed to meet the requestor’s requirements  Task: a smaller item of work

Work Breakdown Structure  The tasks that you define in your Work Breakdown Structure are what you will put into MSProject  For each task, you will assign resources, an estimate of how long that task will take, and the dependencies (i.e. is a task dependent on another one to finish before it can start?)

Work Breakdown Structure Resource Task Activity Milestone Duration

Work Breakdown Structure  There are (at least) 4 uses for the WBS: Thought Process Tool Architectural Design Tool Planning Tool Project Tracking and Reporting Tool

Work Breakdown Structure  Thought Process Tool A design and planning tool Project Manager and team can visualize exactly how the work of the project is defined and managed effectively

Work Breakdown Structure  Architectural Design Tool A picture of the work of the project and how the tasks relate to one another.

Work Breakdown Structure  Planning Tool Take the tasks that need to be done to develop the project and estimate effort, elapsed time and resources Build a schedule of when the work will be done – will show project completion

Work Breakdown Structure  Project Tracking and Reporting Tool Shows visually what is happening and when – it is used for reporting status Shows how much of a specific task is completed

WBS Extract

Agenda  Work Breakdown Structure—What is it?  Defining Activities (Summary Tasks)  Defining Tasks  More Examples

Defining Activities  How to define Activities (Summary Tasks): There are various methods used:  Top Down  Team  Bottom Up

Defining Activities  Top Down Start at a goal (activity) level and break down the work to lower levels (tasks). An activity may involve many steps (tasks) and many people (resources) being assigned to that one activity. It is important to break down to the lowest level task so that only one resource is assigned to that task.

Defining Activities  Top Down Once you are down to the lowest level task you can sequence the tasks so that some can be done in parallel. This will allow you to save time on the overall project.

Defining Activities  Team Assign team members various part of the overall project to determine the work breakdown structure for that section of the project. It may involve using the top-down approach at this point in time to build the detailed schedule.

Defining Activities  Bottom Up More like a brain-storming session. Not very organized. Start with the goal and as a large group identify the tasks needed to be completed. Tasks are written down. When no more task suggestions are made then the group tries to organize the tasks into like groupings. Very inefficient.

Defining Activities  We will use: Top Down We will start with activities or summary tasks such as use cases, database creation, and so on, and break these into tasks

Defining Activities  Different approaches to defining activities: Noun approach  e.g. functional decomposition (activities around building each use case or database creation) Verb approach  e.g. common activities, from a project methodology e.g. design, build, test, document

Defining Activities  We will define activities that will identify a significant deliverable  Use case  Database  Documentation  System testing  Acceptance testing

Agenda  Where are we?  Work Breakdown Structure—What is it?  Defining Activities (Summary Tasks)  Defining Tasks  More Examples

Defining Tasks  Once you have decided on your activities (summary tasks), you need to define the sub tasks needed for each activity.

Defining Tasks Each task in your WBS must meet the following six criteria: 1. Status/Completion is measurable For your plan, make tasks small enough so you can use a binary measure: done or not done 2. Start/End clearly defined Just give MSProject the duration; it will compute the start and end dates. We will provide MSProject with a project start date only.

Defining Tasks Task criteria continued: 3. Task has a deliverable Makes it easier to track; gives it validity 4. Time/Cost easily estimated Smaller tasks are easier to estimate

Defining Tasks Task Criteria Continued 5. Duration is within acceptable limits Shorter tasks are easier to manage (problems become apparent very quickly) Tasks must be less than 10 hours 6. Tasks are independent One person per task (except for meetings)

Defining Tasks  Keep refining your task hierarchies until you are satisfied that you have covered al of the work that needs to be done in order to get your project completed

Agenda  Where are we?  Work Breakdown Structure—What is it?  Defining Summary Tasks  Defining Tasks  More Examples

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